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D W Wilkin (1)

Autor(a) de The End of the World

Para outros autores com o nome D W Wilkin, ver a página de desambiguação.

D W Wilkin (1) foi considerado como pseudónimo de David W Wilkin.

6 Works 27 Membros 7 Críticas 1 Favorited

Obras por D W Wilkin

Foram atribuídas obras ao autor também conhecido como David W Wilkin.

The End of the World (2010) 14 exemplares
The Shattered Mirror (2011) 5 exemplares
Caution's Heir (2014) 2 exemplares
Two Peas in a Pod (2012) 1 exemplar
Jane Austen and Ghosts (2011) 1 exemplar

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Sexo
male

Membros

Críticas

For star rating and full review please visit InD'tale magazine online, May 2015 issue www.indtale.com
 
Assinalado
LiteraryChanteuse | Jan 27, 2016 |
This is a charming Regency. The brothers Coldwell are both struggling to reacquaint themselves not only with family, but just who they are and what direction to take with their lives, post war. Though neither is excited by their elder sister’s machinations for matrimony, the inevitable happens and they are besotted and yes, confused by hopes, doubts and possibilities. But after a declaration of one of the misses that she could never consider the elder, the brothers hatch a plan that makes their sister’s look tame. The farce that follows is amusing yet handled with care.

Normally stories of twins exchanging identities makes me cringe but Mr. Wilkin pulls it off with the feel of a Shakespearean comedy laced with enough reality to prevent it from becoming too ridiculous. He deftly uses the truth of scars unseen and facts of life at the time to balance the humor and what could have been cruelty on the part of the brothers. The ladies, not to be outdone, plot a counter attack that even Wellington could never have imagined. Beatrice and Benedict would have danced at the weddings in perfect charity.

I love stories that contain more than one romance. That family and friends - the kind we all want to be and have - do not live their life in an isolated story line used to translate well to the written tale. It is a fact of modern fiction that we expect One Great Hero and One Awesome Heroine per story with nods to the secondary characters that might have their own book, later, if sales are good. I’m not sure if that’s due to reader preference or the fear of writers and publishers. Either way, I am always delighted to find an author willing to flesh out a well crafted story of more than one couple, especially when they make me laugh!

For several generations, we’ve been romanced in fiction by wonderful authors explaining their view of how women believe men think and feel. Mr. Wilkin provides a generous glimpse of a man’s perspective in a formulaic genre that is quite consistent with the literature of the era while mindful of his modern audience. I can only hope more men are as bold and more women alert to the subtle differences in perspective that remind us all just how romantic the differences can be. This is definitely a *keeper* for my bookshelf.

Reviewed for Romance Reviews Magazine - I received a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
katieKofemug | Apr 2, 2014 |
A friend recommended this Regency Romance thinking I would like it. She was right. I really enjoyed all the manners and mores of the time. It reminded me of several Georgette Heyers I've read. The author uses his talent to really make me think that when he relates what is going on in a regency drawing room, I am there hearing it. The dialogue and style he has written evokes that well. I can see where others who don't read regencies might have problem with the language, but working with it, it gives the story a complete regency flavor.

The author seems to have a good grasp of what goes on during that time and I wish that there was more about the mining, but apparently the first railroad type tracks for mining was in this area.

The hidden man and his interaction with his patrons was well done, and I liked the little scamp as well. The love story, the right girls getting the right men was well handled letting me think that until the very end, there was tension and drama all around.

With the first kiss and the final page coming together quite nicely. I too can recommend this book to my friends.
… (mais)
1 vote
Assinalado
AlisonDavis | 4 outras críticas | Sep 4, 2011 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Member Giveaways.
Although the concept of a period romance (Victorian, Georgian, Edwardian?? I'm not certain which period the novel is set in) is always interesting, unfortunately this novel fails to deliver. The writing is overly expository--and not in a good way. Grammar, syntax, and style are rarely in evidence, and the book suffers because if it. A 300-pager that could be a much better book at half the length. My advice would be to employ a ruthless editor.
1 vote
Assinalado
aungelic | 4 outras críticas | Sep 4, 2011 |

Estatísticas

Obras
6
Membros
27
Popularidade
#483,027
Avaliação
4.1
Críticas
7
ISBN
6
Marcado como favorito
1